UTS Students' Association explained

The University of Technology Sydney Students' Association (UTSSA)
Motto:Our Voice. Our Way. Our SA.
Institution:The University of Technology Sydney
President:Nour Al Hammouri
General Secretary:Will Simmons
Assistant General Secretary:Zebadiah Cruickshank
Education Officer:Anna Theiben
Welfare Officer:Mia Campbell
Location:Level 3, UTS Tower Building 1,Broadway NSW 2007
Members:46,328

The University of Technology, Sydney, Students' Association is the representative body for students at the University of Technology, Sydney.[1] It is based on level 3 of building 1 at UTS. It publishes the student magazine Vertigo.[2] The association has departments which have previously worked collaboratively with the university to achieve practical outcomes for students, as well as ensuring that the university is held to account over its handling of student issues. Historically, this has resulted in numerous successful campaigns which have won rights for students in the university.

Executive

The executive of the UTSSA are responsible for the day to day operation of the Association, and are elected by the students annually.[3]

2022-23 Executive

The executive members elected for 2022-23 were:[4]

PositionNameColspan=2PartyAllianceTook officeTerm ends
PresidentNour AL HAMMOURIStudent Unity Fire Up!December 2022December 2023
General SecretaryWill SIMMONSNational Labor StudentsFire Up!December 2022December 2023
Assistant General SecretaryZebadiah CRUICKSHANKNational Labor Students Fire Up! December 2022December 2023
Education OfficerAnna THIEBENReviveDecember 2022December 2023
Welfare OfficerMia CAMPBELLStudent UnityFire Up!December 2022December 2023

2023-24 Executive

The current executive members elected for 2023-24 are:[5]

PositionNamePartyAllianceTook officeTerm ends
PresidentMia CampbellStudent Unity Fire Up!December 2023December 2024
General SecretaryAdam LevettNational Labor StudentsFire Up!December 2023December 2024
Assistant General SecretaryBridie O’KellyStudent Unity Fire Up! December 2023December 2024
Education OfficerAlisa HamiltonNational Labor Students Fire Up!December 2023December 2024
Welfare OfficerAylin CihanStudent UnityFire Up!December 2023December 2024

Student Representative Council

UTS Student Representative Council
House Type:Student Body
Body:UTS Students' Association
Legislature:56th Council
Coa Pic:UTS Students' Association.jpg
Foundation:[6]
Leader1 Type:President
Leader1:Mia Campbell
Party1:Labor Unity
Election1:December 2023
Leader2 Type:General Secretary
Leader2:Adam Levett
Party2:National Labor Students
Election2:December 2023
Structure1:Svgfiles 2023-12-19-02-08-34-338039-6502964268711214394.svg
Structure1 Res:220px
Members:25
  • 14 General Councillors
  • 5 Executive
  • 4 Directly Elected Office Bearers
  • 2 University Board [7]
Political Groups1:Fire Up! (24)

Students First (1)

Term Length:1 year
Voting System2:Single Transferable Vote
Last Election1:October 2023 [8] [9]
Next Election2:October 2024
Constitution:Constitution of the UTS Students Association
Rules:Bylaws of the UTS Students Association
Website:UTSSA Student Representative Council

The Student Representative Council is the representative body of students at UTS. It was founded in 1966 under the NSW Institute of Technology.[10]

Role

The role of the SRC is to represent the students at the University of Technology Sydney Meetings are held monthly, and are open to all students.[11] They are usually held on-campus and are promoted on social media pages. Important matters relating to student activism, concerns, budgets and the function of the association are raised at meetings. Motions are raised and voted upon by councillors, and are passed by a simple majority. However, a two-thirds requirement must be met to pass amendments to the constitution.[3] Office bearers for the Queer, Enviro, Disabilities and Ethno-Cultural collectives are elected annually by the SRC at the "repselect" meeting. To be eligible, a candidate must be a General Councillor. Office bearers are elected by a majority by SRC members.[11]

The UTSSA Student Council is democratically elected, with elections in the spring semester of each year.[12]

Factions

Like most bodies representing students in Australia, the SRC is divided into factions. The factions work together in groups, in 2022 these are based on their election tickets: "Fire Up!" and "Left Action" (Labor Right, Labor Left), "Revive" (Independents, Socialist Alternative) and "Accountability" (Australian Democrats).[13] [14]

Student Unity

Student Unity, the centre-left of Labor. The group is affiliated with national Labor Right and the Australian Labor Party. They are the largest faction in 2023 and have held the Presidency three times in the last four years. Student Unity's principles centre on unionism, service provision and comprehensive advocacy.

National Labor Students (Labor Left)

National Labor Students, the unofficial student wing of Labor Left, its pillars are Feminism, Socialism, Unionism, and Democracy.[15] The faction has a strong record on LGBTQIA+ rights and environmental action on campus. The faction contested the 2021 election under the "Fire Up!" ticket. Labor Left has 5 members on council.

Composition

The current Student Representative Council as elected for 2023-24:

NamePartyAlliance
Mia CampbellFire Up!
Adam LevettNLSFire Up!
Bridie O’KellyFire Up!
Alisa HamiltonNLSFire Up!
Aylin CihanFire Up!
Jermaine Petterson HeardFire Up!
Laura CurrieFire Up!
Mariam YassineFire Up!
Raghav MotaniFire Up!
Daewah TheinFire Up!
Joseph NaffahFire Up!
Adrian LozancicAustralian DemocratsStudents First
Matthew MurrayFire Up!
Dirk HoareFire Up!
Samiha EmranFire Up!
Salma ElmubasherFire Up!
Bilvika AbburiFire Up!
Januka SuraweeraFire Up!
Sina AfsharmehrFire Up!
Thomas RichardsonFire Up!
Hasim RahmanFire Up!
Neeve NagleFire Up!
Jeremy HigginsFire Up!
Peter Blair MunfordFire Up!
Kurt ChengFire Up!
[16]

Collectives

Women's

The Women's department creates a space and community for non-male identifying members of the UTS community and is affiliated with NOWSA. There is an Autonomous Space in Building 3. In 2016 they worked with the NUS Women's Officer to host the NOWSA conference for that year.[17]

Welfare

The welfare collective is opened to all students but has in the past been asked to be the main organising body for students from low socio-economic backgrounds. The collective aims to help students by providing food and how2life workshops. These workshops have covered topics like cooking 101, renting how-to, and fair rights.[18]

Education

The Education Collective, also known as the Education Action Group, is open to all students and is focused on campaigning around issues that affect all students on campus. This includes fighting against fee hikes and cuts to staff and for a better trimester system, more library hours, in addition to other campaigns led by the National Union of Students.[19]

Indigenous

The Indigenous Collective is composed of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander students. The Collective meets regularly and works alongside Jumbunna Institute for Indigenous Education and Research. Founded in 2012, they run campaigns surrounding Indigenous issues and have been an active political and pastoral component of the Students' Association since their inception. Camille Smith is Indigenous Officer for 2022.[20]

Queer

The Queer department runs campaigns for LGBTIQ students on campus and maintains a Queer Space on campus. Campaigns include anti-homophobia campaigns, student safety campaigns, Pride Week, Anti Queer Youth Homelessness campaign, Gender Neutral Bathrooms campaign and works with the Out2Party club on social events. The Queer department also works closely with the UTS Equity Department.[21]

Enviro

Affiliated to the Australian Student Environment Network, the Enviro Collective is focused on green activism and campaigns like 'Flick my Switch' and 'Fossil Free University' as well as environmental campaigns off-campus.[22]

Disability

The Disabilities Collective is for UTS students who identify as having a disability and/or medical condition. The group operates without a space but cooperates with many internal UTS sectors to ensure students with disabilities receive adequate support. The group also campaigns around larger abilities awareness projects.[23]

Ethno-Cultural

The Ethnocultural Collective is composed of students from across many ethnic backgrounds, races, religions and beliefs with the aim to promote harmony and peace through fostering the diversity at UTS. The collective works to ensure representation and supportive frameworks for students experiencing or at risk of prejudice and opposes all forms of discrimination against migrants, minorities, and people of faith.[24]

International

The International Collective is for International Students at UTS who seek networking opportunities and space to protest on issues which affect them. Campaigns include the right to access student travel concessions and fairer fee structures.[25]

Postgraduate

The UTS Postgraduate Committee is a group of students who aim to make a positive contribution to the educational experience of Postgraduate students. There a range of initiative the Postgraduate Collective advocate, including fairer fee structures.[26]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Students' Association. 29 June 2016.
  2. Web site: Home. UTS Vertigo.
  3. Web site: UTSSA Constitution. UTS Students Association.
  4. Web site: Declaration of 2022 Election Results . 2022-12-08 . UTS Students' Association . en.
  5. Web site: 2023 . 2023 UTSSA Elections – Declaration of Results .
  6. Web site: Celebrating over 50 years of advocacy . UTS Students Association . UTSSA.
  7. Web site: Constitution of the UTS Students Association . UTS Students Association . UTS Students Association.
  8. Web site: Election Notice. UTS Students Association . UTS Students Association.
  9. Web site: Declaration of Results . UTS Students Association . UTS Students Association.
  10. Web site: Celebrating over 50 years of advocacy and action.. 2022-01-25. UTS Students' Association. en.
  11. Web site: Speaking up for every student.. 2022-01-24. UTS Students' Association. en.
  12. Web site: Our student reps are here to make uni life better. Want to get involved?. 2022-01-25. UTS Students' Association. en.
  13. Web site: Student Election Final Results. UTS Students' Association.
  14. Web site: 2021-12-01 . 'Unprecedented, undemocratic': UTSSA ousts Education Officer . 2022-01-24 . Honi Soit . en-US.
  15. Web site: Volume 6: Autonomy by UTS Vertigo. 2022-01-24. issuu.com. en.
  16. Web site: 2022 UTSSA Elections Declaration of Results . UTSSA . UTS Students Association.
  17. Web site: Women’s Collective. UTS Students' Association.
  18. Web site: Welfare Collective. UTS Students' Association.
  19. Web site: Education Collective. UTS Students' Association.
  20. Web site: Indigenous Collective. UTS Students' Association.
  21. Web site: Queer Collective. UTS Students' Association.
  22. Web site: Enviro Collective. UTS Students' Association.
  23. Web site: Disabilities Collective. UTS Students' Association.
  24. Web site: Ethnocultural Collective. UTS Students' Association.
  25. Web site: International Collective. UTS Students' Association.
  26. Web site: Postgraduate Collective. UTS Students' Association.